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B.B. King remembered as a 'beacon' for blues lovers

Giants of the music world are remembering the life of late blues musician B.B. King, considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time, after his death late Thursday at his Las Vegas home. He was 89.

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Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, playing his beloved Lucille, influenced countless guitarists

B.B. King, whose scorching guitar licks and heartfelt vocals made him the idol of generations of musicians and fans, earning him the nickname King of the Blues, died late Thursday at home in Las Vegas. He was 89.

His lawyer, Brent Bryson, told The Associated Press that King died peacefully in his sleep at 9:40 p.m. PDT.

Bryson said funeral arrangements were being made.

King's eldest surviving daughter, Shirley King, of the Chicago area, said she was upset that she didn't have a chance to see her father before he died.

'Beacon' for blues lovers

King inspired the work of countless musicians over his five-decade career.

Musicians Eric Clapton and B.B. King share a smile at the Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in New York in March 2005. (Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images)Legendary British guitarist Eric Clapton, who worked with King on the 2000 album Riding With The King, expressed his sadness over the loss of his long-time friend and mentor.

"I wanted to thank him for all the inspiration and encouragement he gave me as a player over the years," Clapton said in a video posted on his Facebook page.

"He was a beacon for all of us who love this kind of music."

Motown singer Smokey Robinson, who grew up listening to King's records, had a parting message for the blues man who was known for his warm and approachable demeanour.

He collapsed during a concert in Chicago last October, later blaming dehydration and exhaustion. He had been in hospice care at his Las Vegas home.

For most of a career spanning nearly 70 years, Riley B. King was not only the undisputed king of the blues but a mentor to scores of guitarists, who included Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, Jimi Hendrix, John Mayall and Keith Richards. He recorded more than 50 albums and toured the world well into his 80s, often performing 250 or more concerts a year.

King played a Gibson guitar he affectionately called Lucille with a style that included beautifully crafted single-string runs punctuated by loud chords, subtle vibratos and bent notes.

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The result could bring chills to an audience, no more so than when King used it to full effect on his signature song, The Thrill is Gone. He would make his guitar shout and cry in anguish as he told the tale of forsaken love, then end with a guttural shouting of the final lines: "Now that it's all over, all I can do is wish you well."

Call-and-response style

His style was unusual. King didn't like to sing and play at the same time, so he developed a call-and-response between him and Lucille.

B.B. King kept up a touring schedule that would have exhausted many younger musicians. Here he is shown at the 1985 Nice Jazz Festival in France. (Ralph Gatti/AFP/Getty Images)"Sometimes I just think that there are more things to be said, to make the audience understand what I'm trying to do more," King told The Associated Press in 2006. "When I'm singing, I don't want you to just hear the melody. I want you to relive the story, because most of the songs have pretty good storytelling."

A preacher uncle taught him to play, and he honed his technique in abject poverty in the Mississippi Delta, the birthplace of the blues.

"I've always tried to defend the idea that the blues doesn't have to be sung by a person who comes from Mississippi, as I did," he said in the 1988 book Off the Record: An Oral History of Popular Music.

"People all over the world have problems," he said. "And as long as people have problems, the blues can never die."

The Delta's influence

Fellow travelers who took King up on that theory included Clapton, the British-born blues-rocker who collaborated with him on Riding With the King, a best-seller that won a Grammy in 2000 for best traditional blues album.

Still, the Delta's influence was undeniable. King began picking cotton on tenant farms around Indianola, Miss., before he was a teenager, being paid as little as 35 cents for every 100 pounds, and was still working off sharecropping debts after he got out of the Army during World War Two.

"He goes back far enough to remember the sound of field hollers and the cornerstone blues figures, like Charley Patton and Robert Johnson," ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons once told Rolling Stone magazine, which named King the sixth best guitarist of all time in 2011.

King got his start in radio with a gospel quartet in Mississippi, but soon moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where a job as a disc jockey at WDIA gave him access to a wide range of recordings. He studied the great blues and jazz guitarists, including Django Reinhardt and T-Bone Walker, and played live music a few minutes each day as the "Beale Street Blues Boy," later shortened to B.B.

Through his broadcasts and live performances, he quickly built up a following in the black community, and recorded his first R&B hit, Three O'Clock Blues, in 1951.

He began to break through to white audiences, particularly young rock fans, in the 1960s with albums like Live at the Regal, which would later be declared a historic sound recording worthy of preservation by the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry.

Former sharecropper toured exhaustively

He further expanded his audience with a 1968 appearance at the Newport Folk Festival and when he opened shows for the Rolling Stones in 1969.

King was not embittered that bands like the Stones and The Beatles achieved huge success with a sound often influenced by earlier black musicians.

Sad to hear B.B. King has left us. I loved collaborating with him, loved his music, &amp; his spirit. He changed music forever. God bless him.

"I don't think that the whites have stole the licks or anything of the sort. I don't know anybody that plays that hasn't borrowed something from somebody," he said in a 1971 interview.

He reached a younger audience in the late 1980s on When Love Comes to Town, a collaboration with U2.

3-time hall of famer

King was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1984, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987 and received the Songwriters Hall of Fame Lifetime Achievement Award in 1990. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush and gave a guitar to Pope John Paul II.

Bono of U2 kneels before B.B. King at a 2008 performance in Los Angeles. King and U2 collaborated two decades earlier on the song When Love Comes to Town, found on the band's Rattle and Hum album. (Alexandra Wyman/Getty Images for Thelonious Monk Institute)Other Grammys included best male rhythm 'n' blues performance in 1971 for The Thrill Is Gone, best ethnic or traditional recording in 1982 for There Must Be a Better World Somewhere and best traditional blues recording or album several times. His final Grammy came in 2009 for best blues album for One Kind Favor.

Through it all, King modestly insisted he was simply maintaining a tradition.

"I'm just one who carried the baton because it was started long before me," he told the AP in 2008.

Born Riley B. King on Sept. 16, 1925, on a tenant farm near Itta Bena, Mississippi, King was raised by his grandmother after his parents separated and his mother died. He worked as a sharecropper for five years in Kilmichael, an even smaller town, until his father found him and took him back to Indianola.

"I was a regular hand when I was seven. I picked cotton. I drove tractors. Children grew up not thinking that this is what they must do. We thought this was the thing to do to help your family," he said.

When the weather was bad and he couldn't work in the cotton fields, he walked 10 miles to a one-room school before dropping out in the 10th grade.

After he broke through as a musician, it appeared King might never stop performing. When he wasn't recording, he toured the world relentlessly, playing 342 one-nighters in 1956. In 1989, he spent 300 days on the road. After he turned 80, he vowed he would cut back, and he did, somewhat, to about 100 shows a year.

He had 15 biological and adopted children. Family members say 11 survive.

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